called into her fatherâs room one evening, where he sat in his big carved and coloured chair. He said to her, âAnd now we are going to play a game. What was the thing you liked best today?â
At first she chattered: âI played with my cousinâ¦I was out withShera in the gardenâ¦I made a stone house.â And then he had said, âTell me about the house.â And she said, âI made a house of the stones that come from the river bed.â And he said, âNow tell me about the stones.â And she said, âThey were mostly smooth stones, but some were sharp and had different shapes.â âTell me what the stones looked like, what colour they were, what did they feel like.â
And by the time the game ended she knew why some stones were smooth and some sharp and why they were different colours, some cracked, some so small they were almost sand. She knew how rivers rolled stones along and how some of them came from far away. She knew that the river had once been twice as wide as it was now. There seemed no end to what she knew, and yet her father had not told her much, but kept asking questions so she found the answers in herself. Like, âWhy do you think some stones are smooth and round and some still sharp?â And she thought and replied, âSome have been in the water a long time, rubbing against other stones, and some have only just been broken off bigger stones.â Every evening, either her father or her mother called her in for What Did You See? She loved it. During the day, playing outside or with her toys, alone or with other children, she found herself thinking, Now notice what you are doing, so you can tell them tonight what you saw.
She had thought that the game did not change; but then one evening she was there when her little brother was first asked, What Did You See? and she knew just how much the game had changed for her. Because now it was not just What Did You See? but: What were you thinking? What made you think that? Are you sure that thought is true?
When she became seven, not long ago, and it was time for school, she was in a room with about twenty children â all from her family or from the Big Family â and the teacher, her motherâs sister, said, âAnd now the game: What Did You See?â
Most of the children had played the game since they were tiny; but some had not, and they were pitied by the ones that had, for they did not notice much and were often silent when the others said, âI sawâ¦â, whatever it was. Mara was at first upset that this game played with so many at once was simpler, more babyish, than when she was with her parents. It was like going right back to the earliest stages of the game: âWhat did you see?â âI saw a bird.â âWhat kind of a bird?â âIt was black and white and had a yellow beak.â âWhat shape of beak? Why do you think the beak is shaped like that?â
Then she saw what she was supposed to be understanding: Why did one child see this and the other that? Why did it sometimes need several children to see everything about a stone or a bird or a person?
But the lessons with the other children stopped. It was because of all the trouble going on, and people going away, for every day there were fewer children, until there were only Mara and Dann and their near cousins.
Then there were no lessons, not even with the parents, who were silent and nervous and kept calling the children indoors; and thenâ¦there was the night when the parents were not there and she and Dann were with the bad man. The good brother was called Gorda. He was Lord Gorda, so said the two who had rescued them. She knew that there was a king and that her parents had something to do with the court.
She kept trying to put herself back into standing in front of Gorda while he was telling her things and she couldnât listen, but all she could see was that tired face of his,